LOS ANGELES, CA--(Marketwired - May 26, 2017) - In the news release, "Robert Lee Ahn Campaign Presents the 5 Misstatements From Jimmy Gomez at Debate," issued earlier today by the Robert Lee Ahn for Congress Committee, we are advised by the company that item number 1 in the numbered list has been corrected. Complete corrected text follows.

LOS ANGELES, CA -- May 26, 2017 -- At Thursday night's debate televised by Telemundo 52 and NBC4 at Occidental College between Robert Lee Ahn and Assemblyman Jimmy Gomez, the two candidates for the 34th Congressional district clashed over issues such as healthcare, taxes, job creation, terrorism, immigration, affordable housing and the economy. The Ahn campaign released its List of the 5 Biggest Misstatements by Gomez:

5. "Something I learned in Sacramento is that the devil is in the details."

Gomez hasn't learned much about details if he missed glaring faults in legislation he voted on such as the massive $52 billion gas tax hike, which includes a sweetheart giveaway to big trucking companies allowing them to escape local environmental regulation and emit more diesel exhaust in California's low-income neighborhoods next to freeways and main traffic thoroughfares.

4. "One hundred thousand units of housing is nothing. We have a failed housing policy in California that doesn't serve the people."

Gomez has presided over that failed housing policy and done little to expand the availability of affordable housing, nor taken any steps to make additional funding available for housing for low-income families.

3. "I'm not a Corporate Democrat."

Gomez has received donations from a mind-boggling variety of corporate entities including Wells Fargo, GMO-king Monsanto, predatory payday lenders, for-profit college operators, private prison corporations and big drug companies. He is the leader in receiving large PAC contributions.

Because Gomez served as Political Director of the United Nurses Association of California and controlled its PAC, even directing donations to his own assembly campaign while still working at the union.